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cudbear
[ kuhd-bair ]
noun
- a violet coloring matter obtained from various lichens, especially Lecanora tartarea.
cudbear
/ ˈkʌdˌbɛə /
noun
- another name for orchil
Word History and Origins
Origin of cudbear1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cudbear1
Example Sentences
The lichens thus treated acquire gradually a deep purple colour, and form the products called "cudbear."
Various species of Lecanora, particularly L. tartarea, known as cudbear, are used in dyeing woollen yarn.
Purple:—For each pound of goods, two ounces of cudbear; rinse the goods well in soap-suds, then dissolve cudbear in hot suds—not quite boiling, and soak the goods until of required color.
If a wine colored with archil and one colored with cudbear are treated treated according to Romei's method, the former gives, with basic lead acetate, a blue, and the latter a fine violet precipitate.
Specimens of varieties of the lichens used in the manufacture of cudbear, orchil and litmus, and of the substance obtained, were also shown in the British department, which were awarded prize medals.
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